“I
can’t even tell you who we played,” he said. “I’m serious. I have no
idea.”

Donovan
swears he knows only that his first win as a head coach came at Marshall, where
he stayed two seasons. We'll get back to that.

He does,
however, recall vividly his first recruiting trip as coach of the Thundering
Herd. He and assistant John Pelphrey were cruising down
Interstate-64 from Huntington, W.Va., into Kentucky on a scouting run. They were
talking basketball, big men and big plans when three deer flashed in the
headlights.

“One went through the radiator,” Donovan said. “So we’re stranded on I-64. It’s
‘Deliverance’ all over again.”

A
trucker stopped to let Pelphrey use his CB radio to call police.

Welcome
to big-time college basketball.

That
was more than 17 years and lots of interstates ago, with the latest one being
I-4. That's the one Donovan and the 10th-ranked Gators (4-1) will take to Amway
Center in Orlando, where they’ll face Stetson (3-2) in the Florida Citrus
Shootout tonight. A victory and Donovan, 46, will become the youngest active
Division-I NCAA coach to reach 400 career wins, passing Kansas’s Bill Self, who
got there two years at age 48.

“This
kind of stuff just makes me feel old,” Donovan said.

But
it also makes him feel nostalgic.

Of
his previous 399 wins, 364 of them came as a coach of the Gators. When asked to
reflect on the mounting victories, Donovan thinks of the Noahs, Horfords and
Brewers, of course, but his run at Florida started in 1996 with a very
different -- that’s putting it politely -- breed of player than the ones who
wear the orange and blue nowadays.

Does
the name Damen Maddox ring a bell?

How
‘bout Greg Williams or Joel Reinhart?

Didn’t
think so. That’s the point.

When
Lon Kruger bolted for Illinois two years after taking the Gators to their first
Final Four, he didn’t leave much behind. Donovan, though, knew what he was
getting into and never slammed the recruiting efforts of his predecessor.
Instead, he combined what he learned at Marshall with what he gleaned as Rick
Pitino’s assistants for some great Kentucky teams and immersed himself in the
daunting challenge of turning Florida into a basketball power.

It
couldn’t be done, Donovan was told by virtually everyone, but he never believed
it. Even after inheriting a roster Pitino publicly said was “bankrupt of
talent.”

“Maybe
they weren’t overly talented, but they had been really, really well coached,”
Donovan recalled of his inaugural team that overachieved in going 13-17, with
just five wins in Southeastern Conference play. “There was a foundation of a
work ethic, of doing the right things, of going to school, of representing
Florida the way it needed to be represented. There were some great things that
Lon had set in place that were part of the foundation that were really
important.”

Eddie
Shannon, a Palm Beach point guard, was a Kruger signee and part of that
team.

The
Gators were coming off a disappointing 12-16 season and their coach had left.
Enter a 30-year-old -- just eight seasons removed from his own college playing
career -- with a couple decent seasons at a mid-major to his credit.

“He
was really, really tough at first, but I also think he had to be,” recalled
Shannon, now 34 and preparing for his 12th season playing professionally
overseas. “He got in our faces and gave us constructive criticism. The ones who
didn’t want to get with the program eventually were weeded out, but as far as
openly resisting what [the coaches] were trying to do, I don’t think any of us
were in position to do that. We weren’t very good, as far as the team was
concerned.”

They
weren’t very good Donovan’s first year, either; only NIT good the second.

The
arrival of Mike Miller, Teddy Dupay and Udonis Haslem -- key members of the
nation’s top-ranked recruiting class -- changed that in ’97-98 when the Gators
reached the NCAA Tournament, only to fall in the Sweet 16 with a heartbreaking
74-73 loss to Gonzaga in the West Region semifinal.

Shannon’s
missed 3-pointer at the buzzer that night was the last shot of his college
career.

“We
didn’t win the game, but that team was the first,” Shannon said. “That team
laid a foundation at Florida. There were lots of SEC championships and two
national titles later, but it all started with that team -- my senior year. And
I’m proud of that.”

Those
Gators won 22 games and started a run of 13 straight 20-win seasons, plus 11
NCAA berths over that time. Before that group, UF had just four 20-win seasons
and five NCAA trips in school history.

“Something
from nothing ... and now look,” Shannon said. “I think it’s great that Billy is
about to win 400. And he’s going to win a lot more there, too.”

It’s
not inconceivable, given the roots his family has planted in Gainesville.

In
the rat race that is big-time sports -- and its turnstile ways with coaching
careers -- Donovan is thankful for all that’s happened in his 16-plus seasons
with the Gators, but even more so that he’s been able to keep an element of
stability for his wife and four children.

He
recalled a conversation he once had with an unnamed coach whose daughter was
getting married. She called to ask her father where she should have the wedding
because their family had moved so much she didn’t know where home was.

No
one can forget the last time Donovan tried to leave town (though it surely will
be a talk-radio topic in Orlando today).

“It’s
difficult to find the consistency that we’ve found here,” Donovan said. “My
family has been great. To be able to have grown up there, with a sense of home
and a neighborhood they’ll always remember ... that’s been a big positive for
me.”

Lots
of positives. Lots of victories.

Which
brings us back to that very first one.

Donovan
may not remember, but it all started Nov. 30, 1994 when Marshall beat Central
Michigan 87-80. Donovan’s first Thundering Herd squad went 18-9 (armed with six
seniors who went 7-18 the year before). His second Marshall team went 17-11.

After
those 35 victories, Jeremy Foley called. Ever since, the milestones have been
calling, too.

No.
100 was in ’99. No. 200 in in ’04. No. 300 in ’07.

With
a win tonight, Donovan will be only 500 or so behind Mike Krzyzewski. Sound
crazy? Of course, it does.

But
who would have thought about No. 400 when a 28-year-old former hot shot Big
East point guard -- hair slicked back and all -- accidentally went deer hunting
17 years ago in West Virginia.

“You
think about guys like [Krzyzewski] and Bobby Knight, guys who have done it so
long,” Donovan said. “I’m sure they felt like, ‘I don’t know how much longer I
can do this? And before you know it, one year has gone by. Then another. And
another. All of a sudden, they’ve built these incredible programs.”

Need to know: The Gators and
Hatters, meeting in the Florida Citrus Shootout, will play for the 66th time in
a series that dates to the 1919-20 season. ... Florida leads the series 51-14,
including a 16-game winning streak. UF’s last win against Stetson was by a
74-46 count two years ago and their last defeat a 77-73 setback on Nov. 26,
1983 at Gainesville. ... This will be the first time the teams have met on a
neutral court. ... Junior F Erik Murphy, who started the first four games of
the season, will miss his second straight game with a torn meniscus in his
right knee and is out indefinitely. Murphy will be replaced by sophomore Will
Yeguete, who had 8 points and 9 rebounds in 17 minutes during his first career
start, a 107-62 win Friday over Jacksonville. The status of sophomore G/F Casey
Prather (groin), who missed the second half vs. JU, will be a game-time
decision, though Prather practiced on a limited basis over the weekend. ... The
Gators have made at least 10 3-point shots in all five games this season and
are hitting 43.6 percent of their shots from distance for the season. ...
Junior G Kenny Boynton has topped 20 points in three straight games and is
making a blistering 51.4 percent from the arc. PF Patric Young had a
career-high 14 points vs. JU. ... Stetson, under first-year coach Casey
Alexander, is averaging 69.4 points per game (compared to UF’s 89.8) and has
wins over Bethune-Cookman, Florida A&M and Division II Saint Leo, and
losses to Florida State and Charleston Southern. ... The Hatters have three
starters scoring in double-figures, led by 6-9 C Adam Pegg’s 12.6 points.